Nine of them. All consecutive integers have nine tenths between them.
0.4 can't be a mixed number. Mixed numbers are greater than one.
To the right of the 0, at four tenths of the dostance between any two consecutive whole numbers.
0.6 is greater than 0.59
If the number is 9.159 the 1 is in the tenths place. Look at the number behind it. If the number behind it is greater than or equal to 5 then add one to the number in the tenths place. Since 5 is a number 5 or greater change the 1 to a 2. So your new rounded answer is now 9.2
Those numbers are equal.
No - since the digit in the tenths column is greater, the number 0.24 is greater than 0.17. The difference between the two numbers is 0.24 - 0.17 = 0.07.
0.4 can't be a mixed number. Mixed numbers are greater than one.
To the right of the 0, at four tenths of the dostance between any two consecutive whole numbers.
No - the number in the tenths column of the number 0.6 is greater than the number in the tenths column of 0.23 - making 0.23 smaller than 0.6.
8.6 is the larger number in this selection, because the number in the tenths place is bigger than in the other two numbers.
0.6 is greater than 0.59
If the number is 9.159 the 1 is in the tenths place. Look at the number behind it. If the number behind it is greater than or equal to 5 then add one to the number in the tenths place. Since 5 is a number 5 or greater change the 1 to a 2. So your new rounded answer is now 9.2
Those numbers are equal.
Any number between 18.25 and 18.34 will round to the tenths as 18.3. There are an infinite amount of numbers between those two, just keep adding decimal places.
Their is practically an infinite amount of numbers between 2.15 and 2.16, we could go anywhere from the tenths place, to the trillionths and beyond. Any number greater then or equal to 2.151 or less then or equal to 2.15999999999 (barred)
Hundredths is two numbers behind the decimal like the 2 in this: 365.1203 And the tenths is on number behind the decimal like the 2 in this: 987.201
In the number 0.5, there are five tenths. In the number 0.32 there are only three tenths and two hundredths.